Tag Archives: Realtor

More Drone Clones

It’s sort of fun as an HOA critic to follow the development of spy drones aimed at the consumer market. Here’s an amazing drone developed by the Japanese Ministry of Defense. All they need is buyers. These things are only 1400 bucks apiece and I know exactly where they can sell 335,000 of them.

That’s how many Homeowners Associations there are in this country. Heck, the price is low enough for each HOA board member and HOA management company to have one. That’s at least a couple of million sales.

The greatest drones, though, are still in the hands of the U.S. Military. They’re smaller than a hummingbird. But they’re all invasive and the typical HOA board isn’t bound by privacy laws. Or ethics.

(click here for the Japanese drone video)

 

Come On, Reporters, Get It Right!

It’s good to see when mainstream reporters start recognizing the massive and growing crisis involving American Homeowners Associations. Still, it’s frustrating when they only tell part of the story.

In the story linked below, a single mom in Charlotte, North Carolina bought an HOA home and suddenly started getting hit with daily fines because her fence was ‘warped.’ No question, she says, it had to be fixed. But by the time she got settled in her new home, the daily fines, fees and legal costs totaled nearly 11,000 bucks. Welcome to your new neighborhood, Lady!

In any event, the reporter for WSOC-TV gets most of the story right. But he talks about the fact that HOAs are like ‘little governments.’ He doesn’t add the critical information that governments of any kind have a court system, a system of last resort. Homeowners Associations don’t.

They’re really not like ‘little governments.’ Unless you add the word, ‘fascist.’
Some day reporters will start getting it right.

(click here for WSOC report)

http://www.wsoctv.com/news/news/local/jason-stoogenke-takes-over-action-9-first-report-m/nbBb8/

Power Blog From Arizona!

George Staropoli, one of the nation’s leaders in the homeowners rights movement, has an excellent blog post we should all commit to memory. If his five proposed legislative changes are ever enacted, this would be a far different country; a country of neighbors instead of embattled homeowners and power-tripping board members.

(click here for 5 proposed changes in law)

 

HOA Murderer Commits Suicide

It won’t satisfy the families of the victims, but it’s just another chapter in the world of ‘HOA Amerika’. The killer of two HOA board members has committed suicide.

Dr. Mahmoud Hindi was a doctor and a homeowner in the Spring Creek Homeowners Association in Louisville, Kentucky. (Most news reporters are ‘goosey’ about using the HOA’s name.) The neighborhood is quite a high-end development, but Hindi’s next door neighbors were officers on the HOA board. And Hindi felt they were perpetually tormenting him over minor code violations. So he walked into a 2012 board meeting in a local church and gunned the two men down.

Hindi wasn’t shy about telling police exactly what he had done and his murder trial was set to begin next year. But a couple days ago, Hindi committed suicide by hanging himself in his jail cell.

There’s nothing that can excuse first degree murder. But the case does provide more insight into how constant torment by neighbors can drive a homeowners over the brink. It’s not the first time a homeowner has fired a gun and taken lives during an HOA board meeting. Sadly, it probably won’t be the last.

(click here for story on Hindi)

 

The Sagas of Smith and Jones

guest blog by Norman McCullough, who lives in Henderson, Nevada

Consider:

Homeowner Smith – (Not living under a Home Owner Association.) 

Mr Smith is a senior citizen who purchased a new home. Being a prudent and forward thinking man, Mr Smith plans to repaint his home in ten years. He knows Nevada weather can be harsh. He estimates the future cost at $2,500 and he sets aside $250 every year for the project. In ten years Mr Smith accumulates the $2,500 needed to get the job done. To his good fortune he finds a company that’s willing to do the job for only $1,750, leaving Mr Smith with $750 to spend on his wife and children. He is rewarded for diligently taking care of his property.

Now take the case of Mr. Jones. 

Mr. Jones (also a senior), belongs to a Homeowner Association that has been investigated by the Federal Government. It seems the board has been stashing away money from excess dues collections and not returning it to the members as required by federal law. A portion of his dues was used to pay the fine imposed by the I.R.S.

Jones is one of 162 homeowners who have also set aside the required $2,500 to paint their homes. Mr. Jones, too, has discovered that only $1,750 is needed to paint each of the 162 homes.

Now do the math. A logical assumption would be that the board would return the excess funds ($2,500 – $1,750= $750) to each of the 162 HOA members who paid the excess dues. But assume that and you would be dead wrong. You see, this board knows the excess funds in a non-profit corporation might raise suspicion at the Internal Revenue Service. So the Association board comes up with a wily plan to avoid revealing the existence of any excess funds.

The board magically ‘shrinks’ the actual size of all the homes in the neighborhood! No kidding! To avoid returning the excess money to the homeowners, 149,850 square feet of stucco surface needing paint has suddenly vanished from the records. Also gone is all the money set aside to do the painting. The Association has effectively robbed the 162 homeowners of the $750 overpayment and then covered up the deception with some weird math. Mr. Jones will not get the $750 returned to him.

When a family buys a home in an HOA and they sign the Contract they are literally giving up many of their constitutional rights, specifically the right to go to court. Not only does the HOA dictate what color your house should be, but more often than not the board abuses the laws that are supposed to protect the consumer from fraud. 

By the way, I am one of the 162 homeowners who live in one of the homes that suddenly shrank. And I’ve done the math.